Queer and feminist politics, collaborative processes and an aesthetic that combines punk, baroque and contemporary elements inform works which celebrate a sense of wonder at the incredible range of sexual, biological and cultural diversity and denounce the systems of oppression, domination and control in our society which threaten that diversity.

Their practice is text-based and communicates this ethical position in a poetic way through the creation of alter-egos which represent the transgender "other" whose presence has been expurgated from official histories. Their current alter-ego is Geyserbird, a transgender shaman who carries out collaborative rituals, a form of experimental politics which aim to question our sense of community and encourage a new relationship towards our environment.

"Streets and public squares are the places par excellence in which Graham´s artistic interventions are carried out. Indeed, thanks to them, public space is once again recovered as such by healing and ritualization practices... In the process generating subjects which, for that moment, create communities of exchange and co-learning."
Eva Caro (investigative Cultural Journalist)